Pike County Democrat, Volume 28, Number 13, Petersburg, Pike County, 6 August 1897 — Page 2
gibe Count «i Democrat WL WMX *1OOK Editor aad P*«|»rl*tor. pRTFocm’RO. . . ?'*TV*VA eg""1 "■'■■ ' i1 " .* It vu announced la Washington, on the -Mth. that Robert J. Tracewell, of Indiana, had been selected as comptroller of the treasury.
Thx sale of the Bonanza mine at Baker City. Ora., baa been consummated and the papers signed. • The prioe paid was $750,0 JO. Paor. Charles Henry Marct. well known as a musician and composer, ♦ died, on the 87th. of apoplexy or heari failure, at bis borne in Brooklyn, ageu 40 years. „ . Tu steamer Portland, which is expected to leave St. Michaels about S*pteraber 15. will, it is said, have on board gold from the Alaskan gold fields valued at <8,000,000. Andrew Carnegie has offered the town of Stirling, Scotland, the seat o;! the palace aud parliament house built by James V.~, the sum of £*1,000 for a public library building. Ex-United States Senator Dooi.ittut of Wisconsin, died, on the 87th, at the home of liis daughter at EdgeWood, near Providence, E. L, of Bright’s disease. He was «2 years of , •«*-___ I A Pekin dispatch says Li HungTsao, grand councilor aud member of the taung U yamen, is dead. He was a believer in a strong anti-foreign policy, and was the chief opponent of Li lluug Chang. __ Mrs. Mart E. Lka.se. the populist orator, has been Selected as queen of the fall festivities, a harvest demonstration, at Topeka, Kus. She wiU reign as queen for a week and wear a <80,000 crown. ^ --- The Industrial World,, of Chicago, issued on the 80th. said: ‘‘Agricultural implement manufacturers are rushing orders for material. The season is protracted, and makers fine1 stocks on hand insufficient.*’ 'A dispatch from Barcelona, Spain, Ml the 80th. said that severe storms bad prevr iled throughout Catalonia for the last lew days with dcva>tating effect srnoug the vineyards Out of 180,* 000 hectares of laud, scarcely 5,000 had escaped. i The detachment of the Twenty-fifth United States infantry (colored), under oommand of Lieut. Movs (white), who rode bicycles from Port Missoula, Mout.. to Su Louis, encamped for four days at Purest park, St. Louis and received much attention. Da Chackcet M. Dkpew. president of the New York Ceutrai Uailroad Co., who so stoutly resisted the legislation compelling railroads in New York to carry bicycles as baggage, has succumbed to tue attractions of the “silent steed,” sad has bought a bike. Cuclatoxgkorn. king of Siam, arrived at Engtaud, on the 30th, in the Siamese royal yacht Maha Chakkri, with the royal suite aud a large retinue of servants. He received a royal taiute from the shipping in the harbor at S pithead. which was gaily decorated. Mbs. Mart Q. Jones, of California, wbo is known in labor circles as the “mother” of the American Railway ! union, is on her way to intercede with i President Mo Kin ley in behaif of S. IX Worden, sentenced to death for acts performed during the labor riots in California in lWi The tariff act ia law form for circulation was received at the document rooms of the seuate and house on tbs tilth. The law makes a pamphlet of W pages. The members of the house will have 85,000, the senators 10.000. sad the senate committee on finance 15,000 for distribution. Judge We L. Datton. of the New Jersey court of errorsaui appeals, died [ 1b Trenton,on the 8»th, as the result of > B stroke of paralysis. He was assistant 1 secretary of the Paris legation when bis fattier was miuiste** to Prance in Ittt-t, and was United States minister to the Hague from It'd to 188K President McKinley left Washing too, on the 8&tu. for his vacatiou that j may keep him away from the city foi > six weeks. He was accompanied by Mrs. McKinley, Secretary and Mrs. Alger, Mr. Porter, Assistant residential bccretary Praden and Executive Clerk Cortelyou, besides servants and children.
Tas weretarjr of war hu suspended the execution of the order starting I part; of United Stales troops for Ai#s- . km on the boat sailing from Seattle August 3. There will be ooe more opportunity to move the command, uu a vessel sailing August do. but Uie indications are that nothing will be don< before spring. Tu conference report on the Dingley tariff bill, having been previously adopted by the house, met with similar indorsement in the senate, by a vote af 40 to SO, ou the 44th, secured Uw aiguature of the /vice president and sru returned to 4he house for the mgaature of the speaker, after which the bill as passed was scut to tue president, who at fcoto-ia attached his signature 4oiW f Dux's trade review, issued on the •1st. says: -Dispatches from almost •very northern city of importauce report* without exception, improvement business, and from Detroit U; sad Portland splen lid Crop prospects. The task of adjusting tue business and industries of the country ■ to conditions created by the new law has progressed with gratify mp rapidity and case.”
CURRENT TOPICS THE HEWS DT BRIEF. PERSONAL AND GENERAL. Mbs. Gertie B. Mack-Schoolt an died, on the 20th. ia Jersey City, N. J., in her one hundrevl &ud first year. She was boru in Prussia. She saw Napoleon march into Prussia, and waved a red haudkerchief at the great emperor. E Father Tom Sherman, son of Gen. Wm. T. Sheriuan, has arrived in Seattle, Wash., from the east, lie is broken down in health and went to Seattle , for recuperation. The pope is again directing special attention to the question of international arbitration, which he considers ; a matter pertaining peculiarly to the j papacv. The comptroller of the currency has issued a call ou national banks for a report on their coudition at the close of business Friday, July Jt The statement of the condition of the treasury, on the 86th, showed; i Available ca.->h balance, $282,273,843; gold reserve, 8143.788.817. a The steamer City of Topeka arrived at Seattle, W&sn.. from Alaska on the 86th. The Topeka brought no Klondike passengers nor glittering gold, but reported that the miners were fiocking toward Dyca by the score from Juneau and Sitka, and that both places threaten to be depopulated. AT Watsou, W. Ya., locks have been put on all the gates and deputies called j for, which places every rniue in the eouuty under the county’s protection. This is done by the operators so the county will be responsible if any of their property is burned. Col. J. Fenton Seymour died in Denver, Col., on the 27th. of Bright's disease. He was boru in New York state in 1838, and went to Colorado in 1660. lu the early days OoL Seymour operated stage lines. Later he engaged in miuiug. Theodore C. Schintz. a Chicago law- I yer and real estate dealer, wboreceutly failedto the extent, it is said, of nearly a mliilbn, was arrest.nl. on the 87th. on a charge of alleged fraud in selling a trusteed for $3,000. He was released on baiL Orro Webber, who was arrested recently, charged with being an accomplice with John Sohlegel in the sensational street murder of Dr. Lyman ▲. Berger in Kansas City, Mu., was liberated, after his preliminary trial on the 87th. The British government has purchased from the Maryland Steel Co., of Baltimore, 780.000 tons of rails, that company's bid being £8,675 less than the lowest British bid. Tub St James Uozette, commenting upon Japan's protest in the Hawaiian matter, says: “According to European usage it amounts to a threat to resist the transfer of the archipelago by force, and is equivalent to warning the 1 United States that they must give up their views as to Hawaii or prepare for war.” On the 87th the president announced, among others, the following recess appoiutiuents: T. V. Powderly, commis-sioner-general of immigration; Robert J. ^ race well, comptroller of the treasury. and Alexander ' L. Morrison, collector of internal revenue for the district of New Mexico. ▲ dispatch received by the state department from the United States consul at Mozambique, on the 23th, said that the French steamer Alphee, which cleared for Beira. May 8L. for Mozambique, bad not been heard from and that it was feared she had foundered at aea. it is probable she had mails from the Untied States on board. Tux stock of the Glucose Sugar Refining Co. has been placed in the list of unlisted securities on the Chicago stock exchange. The official announcement, issued ou the 28th, stated that Die total issue is $40,060,000. of which $26,000,000 are common and $14,000,000 preferred shares.
Mias Ghack Au.es, the Kansas school teacher, on trial at Chvadler, Okla.. was acquitted, on the 33th, of the chaise of poisoning Miss Phropia Eckes. her rival, and the latter’s moth* •r. The verdict received the com* mendation of the public. Bu>s were opened at the treasury department. on the 33th. for the foundation work of the Chicago post othoe building. There were 33 bid*, of which that of McA'Jiur Brus. Co., of Chicago, for 9303.4.'% wa» accepted. Tua handsome Carrara marble boat of President McKinley that la to be placed in the state eapitol at Columbus. O., arrived at New York from Naples on the 23th. A tkais was wrecked on the Central Pacific road four mile* west, of tteno, Nr*., on the Sftth. Six Indians were killed and nine injured. Quite a number of the train crew sustained injuries. , bTA n Commaxdeb Do do ic has granted the application for the organization of I U. A. K- post at Notre Dame, Ind.. the seat of Noire Dame university. The membership of tnc post will he composed « hotly of Catholic priests. Admiral. Walajkk. CapW Carter end Prof, liaapt, tue uew Nicaragua canal eottuai^ion, held a preliminary meeting in the engineer’s office nt the war department on the 21th Although they have nut received their com mm* aiona, they distressed nt amne length their in tore f**"i
Woruj'i «nd national sorepintmc* Mt of the department of scientific temperance Instruction in the Woman’s Christian Temperance* union, Mrs. Mary 11. Snnt, sailed, on the 29th, from Boston for Brussels as fraternal dele* gate from the W. C. T. U. to the Anti* Alcohol congress to be held in that city. She will return in September. This Southwestern Passenger association is apparently going to pieces. The St. Louis & San Francisco has withdrawn. The Bock Island and Santa Fe, it is reported, are about to do so, and there will seemingly not be enough lines left t > maintain the or* ganization.
iuk jfrtrav i act; uciwwu uic nvcaiu yachts Pathfinder and Enquireron Lake Michigan ended,on the ,jaih,in a victory for the Buffalo boat. The Path tinder frave np the contest when off Waukegan, 111., and turned back for Chicago. The loss of the whaler Cape liorn Pigeon in the Japan sea during a furious storm was announced on the 39th. Capt. Scullatn and the crew of 18 were saved, but 900 barrels of sperm oil went down with the vessel. Minister Santo-Triso, of Portugal, has received no information concerning the alleged revolutionary troubles in his country. He oelieves he would have been notified of auy serious outbreak. Tub Belgian chamber of deputies passed a bill, on the 39th, compelling all foreigners who have had a year's residence in that country to enroll themselves in the civic guard. John F. Ryan and John Graves, who lured Lawyer Burt S. Clark, of Brooklyn, to a fiat iu New York city, on July 19, and then robbed him and tried to force acid down his throat, were sentenced, on the 89th, to 18 year*’ imprisonment at hard labor. Working behind closed doors, J. K. Hardy, of Chicago, claims to have produced, at a cost of ten cents a pound, a metal which experts pronounce gold. Several bricks of the metal have been purchased by jewelers, who declare it good enough gold for them. Faiackes throughout the United States for the week ended on the 30tl», as reported by It. G. Dun & Co., were 338. against 381 for the corresponding week of last year. For Canada the failures were 2s. against 40 last year. Tuk commercial treaty between Great Britain and the German rollvereiu, which has been in force sinee May 3J, 1804, was reuouuce t, on the 30th. by Great Britain and ceases to be operative a year hence. John Anderson aud Hagens Nelson were fatally injured by tire tipping ol a derrick ou a new building at Market and Van Bureu streets. Chicago, OB the 80th. The men fell from the sixth story to the street. Br the premature explosion of a dynamite blast on B-echwooi boulevard. in Pittsburgh. Pa., oa the 30th, three men were dangerously hurt, one of them probably fatally. The statement of the condition o! the treasury, on the 30th. showed: Available cash balance, $238,172,598: gold reserve. $143,878,309. The crops in a strip five miles wide and 30 miles long in Bock county, Minn., were entirely destroyed by hail on the night of the 30th. The Japanese government has accepted the offer made by Hawaii to arbitrate ma tters in dispute between th« two countries. A dispatch from Lisbon says the situation at Oporto is alarming. Ministers fear an attempt at revolution. The governor of the town has been dismissed and replaced by Augusto de Castilho, a naval officer. LATE NEWS ITEMS. F*n. Dcbar, tu«, negro poet, is being lionised in London in most Mattering fashion. The color line is not drawn in English society, and the colored versifier, being the latest literary novelty, is much sought for at receptions, garden parties and similar gatherings. News from Semlais to the effect that the revolt in India is rapidly spreading. British and native Indian reinforcements are beiug pushed forward. Several skirmishes have been fought in whicji large numbers of the enemy were slain. The trustees appointed to locate the Old Folks’ Home for Illinois Odd Fellows after viewing the sites off ered : and considering the proposition of Monmouth. Alton. Vandalia. Olney, St. Elmo and Carthage, have decided U locate the home at Mattoon. Mb. Leon Godchau, the owner of •even sugar plantations in Louisiana, and the largest sugar producer in the United States, has advanced the wages M all field labor 18)< per cent., com mencing on the 1st. News has reached Sam Francisco of the serious illness of Walter S. Hobart, the young millionaire, prominent in racing circles, at his home in San Mateo. He is suffering from ap
pendicitis. Ukavt and lone-continued rain throughout lower Austria, Bohetpia. Moravia and other provinces has resulted in annihilating the crops read; for harvest, and flooding most of tne towns to a great depth. Rkckjtt rainfalls in southeastern j Kimiaii sod northeastern Indian territory insure the largest corn crop eve* j grown in that area. Some fields will i make 100 bushels to the acre. Wheat | is turning out from 80 to 40 bushels pet j acre. j Matok Strong of New York has appointed Col. George Moore Smith, of the Sixty-ninth regiment, to succeed ■ Col. F D. Grant as police commissioner, i The new eouunia&ioner was sworn in on the 8d. j A orkat revival in the diamond trade | is predicted in New York city. It is *aid that within a few days from oov to two million dollars* worth of diamonds have been ordered in the European markets. Ox the tht the associated banks of New York city held $15.731.US0 in excess of the requirements of the 85 per cent rule. DtsrsTCHxa frn points in Minnesota and South D-Jk >ta allege damage * to wheat from hailstorms.
INDIANA STATE NEWS. Whrat sold for 74 cents In Anderson other day. Ex-Mayor Am Thomas, of Terre Haute, dropped 'dead. Gideon Ci tkki., aged 104, died at bis home near Bioomfield. At Terre Haute Daniel Roper was killed while handling a live electric ; light wire. ^QCIrs Jonx Hausr, of Jefferson* | vil.e, joined eight couples in wedlock the other day. Chaki.es & Hornet, of Evansville, was married to his niece, Lillian Price, aud the gin’s mother has just learned of the iact R. R Brhib and Prof. R- A. Morely, representing a syndicate of capitalists, have secured a 30 days’ option ou SO acres or land adjoining Washington ' with a view of erecting &6j,GOO college , build ngs.
A Baltimore A Ohio Southwestern [ railway official was is Wash ngton a ' lew days ago viewing tue ground be* [ tween Washington and Petersburg, bis road having in contemplation tae construction o£ a branch line to the P.ke county coal and natural gas Bells. M. A. Reed, of Anderson City claims to have inven-e l an oil that will an* »wer the purpose of coal as fuel lor l warships. At Kokomo, on account of the factor* tes resuming, workmen have become | scarce and the contractors on tue new | county pike want 150 more men. Mart Gloke, Sarah Meyers and Jonn Kee.er, of L» Grange county, have been notified tnat they are heirs , to a vast estate near Danv lie. Pa. Rov Sloan, an ex-convict, was captured the otuer night in an open field : by enraged farmers, near Ligonier. Sloan attempted an assault upon an aignt-year-old girl. Tne arrival of the authorities alone saved Sloan’s necK, as the rope was already hang-ng from a tree lit'Kin, Ferkins. aged 04 years, the c'dast man in Ran io pu county, ai.d ; Mrs. Eliza beta Goings, aged 76 years, nf Greenville, O., both colored, were married at the residence of R*v. Cal Cook, in Wincnester. The groum has been married four times h f >re ani | the bride twice He is the father of ! 24 children and innumerable grand- ■ chil .ren. 1 Tut Nivison-Weiscon bottle factory, ; E wood, started the otner morn.ug j with a full force and wiil run inaei* I Initelv. About 3d0 men are employed. Bob Meeks has at his drug store in Faruiiand a two-legged cat. Its fore ! fe t and legs are as natural as any. bat ; it has no sign of hin 11 jgs. It is very p ay ul, and is qu.te a curiosity running around on its tw feet. Commissioners Conner and Terhnne, appointed by Gov. Mount to v.sit the Indiana coal fields an 1 report on the | ^oadition of the miners, submitted | their conclusion a few days ago. They find that about S.0J0 miners and farm . iliea will need assistance if the preseut I conditions continue. Tney suggest i that prosperous people of Indiana should give the subject their thought. Operators are quoted to tue effect that they are responsible for low wages and the condition of tue miners, for they have forced down prices under the stress of competition, which in turn has driven th *m to it The report calls j attention to tue fact that no lawlessness exists and that there are no signs ’ an unru.y spirit. Gov. Mount the other nignt issued an appeal to the people of Indiana calling for aid for the striking coal miners. A committee has been app dated to receive subscriptions. The miners in many eases are destitute. Mrs. John Roe, of Huntington county, was couking supper on a gasoline stove, when her ciotning caught fire. She was burned to a crisp. Thomas Alexander, the tallest man in Rusn county, died suddenly of heart disease. He was 6 feet 10 mcaes h.gh and nis brother Jim is 6 feet S inches, l'he Alexanders were wi teiy known as die “Twin Hoosier giants.” \ The following allowances for clerk hire in Ind.aua post offices whose postmasters receive S2,5J0 or over were announce 1 a ;ew days since: Anderson, 13,5?:!; Attica, SV»0Q; Crawfordsviile, £>.300; Ei a hart, $6,744; Kiwood, $1,500; Evansville, $12,40 j; Ft Wayne, $12,.64; Goshen, $2,59-1; Indianapolis, $61,530; Lafayette, $6,554; Marion, $3,124; Mancie, $5,4-4; Rieamond, $6,000; South Bend, $0,214; Terre Haate, $10,508. August is Auburn, of Muncie, whose mania is to order a quantity of goods from several merchants every day, will he sent to an asylum. 1 he St George hotel, one of the oldest and largest hosteiries in southern Indiana, has dosed its doors on a^ count of lack of patronage. The yield of wheat in Madison county will be trom 18 to 30 bushels to an acre
AT Rentland .Miss t»race Hoover was burned to death by the explosion of a gasoline stove. * Ah investigation shows that Mrs. Lula W ill is ms, of Laporte, who died recently, w s poisoned. las Indians Farmers’ Savings and Loan association, of Ft. Wayne, has gooe into the nands of a receiver. • AT Gosport, Jens De Vere lost 1300 on a three-card monte game at Hall’s circus Daniel Llkakt, a crippled shoemaker, has mysteriously dLappeaed at Lk* hart. A hovexkst is on foot to prevent the carry i «< of small children on the front of b.crcies at Anderson. 1 WO brewing firms o. South Head booght all tne beer revenue stamps at the deputy codecior’a offij i t-iere. saving 7*4 per cent on frv-lJJ under the liiogley tariff provisions. The goveruor has s.ued a proclamation designating Octooer 39 as Arbor day. ' . Br order of the .nige of the circuit court at Washington the Evsnsvula A Kicnmond rat.way has been talcen out of the han is of a rece.ver and placed in the nands of New York parties. The terminal of the road are fcdsora, tnis county, and Wastport, Decatur county. Tne ID'S will be ea* tended to nichmond.
marching miners. ▲ Lively Day at Turtle Greek Encampment. Keeping 'Tilth on Working Miner* Henry IMiimse lu tbe yimutity ut Coni Cun* lug Out of tile I'iiraiuitt B»jlua-A Surprise In Store for Operuturs,
Pittsburgh. Pa., Aug. 2.—AH roads led to 'i urtle Creek yesterday. Marching miners from ail over Ike district were converging toward Camp Determination. and if ail those reported as beiug on the march reach the scene before morning, there will be at least 6.000 diggers present at the meeting which is scheduled for 11 o’clock at McCrea's scuool house. The miners expect 6,000 to be on Uaud. The borough of Turtle Creek experienced the liveliest day in its history with its large transient popuia- ! tion of miners and curious visitors, but the day passed without trouble of any kind. Burgess Teats, of the .borough, Tisited the miners’ camp, and stated he had no reason to order the crowd to ‘ disband, and as ioug as peace prevails ' he will not disturb them. | There was a complete shift in the : maxe-up of the campers yesterday. I The meu from the Wheeling divis'en ' of the Baltimore & Ohio, who have been on guard ever since the big movement ngaiust De ArimtCs was inaug- | u rated, leit during tbe night for their homes at Finleyville, ’ Gaslouviile, Snowden, Whitehall and Bunksviile. These same men, after reachiug home and recuperating somewhat, have formed new divisions and are returning to the seat of war in order to attend the big meeting this morning. | Wniie tae old guard was dituug last night, new meu were taxing their places and too«c charge of the watch tuat is to be Kept up until $»tl of the \ Mew York & Cleveland men quit work, i Saturday's guard was noticeaole for the absence of foreigners. The gatuering on watch to-day is just tne reverse and is composed almost entirely of tne foreign element which is more excitatde tuuu tue others and much harder tocontroL Tius pause gives to the situat.ua a more serious aspect. Over 1,0 JO weary strikers were quartered at Camp Determination, and aoout 10J at Camp Desperation, aud about 400 lounged aoout tue hills above and around 'turtle Creek. When the first batch of 650 marchers arrived On tne scene yesterday morning tUey were very hungry aud clamored for food. Tuere were provisions enough leit for 2j0 men, and a grand rusa was made lor the provision | wagon, and the resuit was ma»y went ' huugry. Aoout this time Organizer Miller arrived on tue scene and announced that a Pittsburgh baucr had donated 1,000 loaves of bread, aud a grocer had given a dozen cheeses. To prevent another rush Miller organized a guard, aud all were salished^tor the time being. As large donations of food have been promised, it is not likely that there wiil be a repetition of yesterday’s scramble. Among the most prominent visitors | at the miners’ Turtle Creek camp yes- | terday were Gen. John La itte, president, and Joseph Bishop, secretary of the Ohio state board of arbitration. : They are ready to solicit signatures to the uniformity agreement aud were present to get the status of affairs among the strikers. Gen. Little expressed some surprise at the demonstration. lie said he had often seen miners on strike in the Buckeye state, bat never had seen them assembled uuder such circumstances. He said he was pleased with the apparent tiniuiIfestatious of peace. Suerilf ilarvey A. Lowrey spent the afternoon in Turtle Creex consulting with nis deputies Cuief Deputy James Richards was m the district ail uight. Sheriff Lowrey said he would uot interfere with the strikers in holding ! meetings if they acted orderly. He will uot allow them to go on tue property of tue New Yorx Cleveland Gas Coal Company, nor will he allow them to act disorderly while marching ou the road. T. B. De Armitt, manager of the Oak Hill rniue, said that he had been importuned by men for positions in the mine. He said he had given 15 of i them places and they would go to work this morning, 'flu added that 1 two men had offered to snppiy him with 50 good miners to go to work Thursday morniug. lie was receiving letters in every mail from turners in various portions of the district asking far places in the New York i Cleve* [ land mines.
A Surprise l> Store for the Operator*. Fairmont, W.Va.. Aug. A—“There is A surprise in store for the operators of this region,” said Joseph W. Rea last night. "Inside of 48 hours there will be several additions to the men already oat.” There is more in Rea's words than many people think. He has been here since last Wednesday and has-had two or three meetings each day. Not in j the usual way, but has quietly gone to { some school house or public hail, aad the miners have gathered there as if | by magic. Yesterday afternoon at Monoagah the meeting was a repetition of the suc- ; cess at Palatine Saturday night and ' Catawba Saturday afternoon. To-day at Worthington he will make a speech ■ to the men. ! Rea says he is highly elated over the prospects and tuiu>cs West Virginia wdi yet come out. Mahou telegrapued from Ckarles.ou yesterday that tue j Kanawha and New River men had 1 struck for 50 cents a ton and a check wcighman. Rea says he iuteuds to Seal! on Special Judge John W. Mason, ' w.io granted the injuaction, to-day, aud that he wants to know what the judge means. lie does not Know whether the injunction attempts to keep aim from holding meetings in the public roads or not. There are better signs of a gen* era! laying-down of picas than there has be*a since the strike began.
RICHARDSON A TAYLOR. Attorneys at Low, Prompt attention given to all bn«lnt*». A Rotary Public eons'a Mly in the office. Offl.v In t’ttrpettier tnutdlug, Eighth and Blaln*«tla* Petersburg, Ind. Ashby a coFiteY, g. b. A*i»by. C. A. Cotley Attorneys at Law, Will practice in all court*. Special attention given to all elvll luisluesa. Notary pudlie constantly In the office. CtUtaeHona made and promptly remitted Office ovet S. UBarrett A Son’s s'ore. Petersbui*. Iud.
g Q. DAVENPORT, Attorney at Law. ' Prompt attention given to all business Ufflce over J, R. Adam* A Son’s drug store.. Petersburg, Inuiaua. Dillon a ureeke, t. h. onion V, H. Green# Attorneys and Counsellors at Law Will practice In Pike and adjoining counties Careful attention given to all business. Collections given promut attention Notary Public alWays in orti e. tHBlre over Citizens’ State Haiftc, Petersburg. Indiana g M. A C L. HOLCOMB, Attorneys at Law. Will practice in all courts. Prompt atten tion given to all business. Office In t urpeutet block, first bnorou Kightb-st, Petersburg C^OX A ELY. wat. k. cor J : UOKACR klt Attorneys at Law, Will practice In the Pike Circuit Court anA adjoining counties. Prompt attention givent«» all civil business entrusted to ibeircare. Office over J R Adams A bon's drug store. Petersburg. Indiana. E. WOOLSEY, Attorney at Law, All business promptly attended to. Collections promptly made and remitted Abstract*of I tile a specialty. t>ffi«-e in Snyder’s building.opposite lieutix-ral office. Petersburg, 1 mi rj^ K. RICE, Physician and Surgeon, Chronic Diseases a specialty Office over Citizen*’ State Bank, Petersburg, Indiana. JLJUNTER A BASINGER, Physicians and Surgeons. Office in the Carpenter bnitalng, first fioor, apposite court house. Petersburg, lud. All calls promptly answered. F. E. HILSMEYER. Physician and Surgeon. Office on Thlrd-sb, nest door to postoffice^ ! Vflnen, Indiana. ufflt-e hours—7 to 9 am, 1 to 3 pm, 6 to 8 paw All calls promptly answered. W. H, STONECIPHER, Dental Surgeon. Office In room* 8 and 7 In Carpenter twdld,ng. Petersburg. Indiana. Operatbm* fir*t1 class. All work warranted Antithetic* used for painless extraction of teetb. Q C. MURPHY. Dental Surgeon. Parlor* in the Carpenter bnlldlng, Petersburg, Indiana. Crown and Bridge Work a specialty. All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. YtTANTED-FAITHFUl.MEN or WOMEN »» to travel for responsible established house In Indiana. Salary $7S9 am! esnensea. Position permanent. Reference Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. The National. Star insurance Building. Chicago. N OTICE Is hereby given to all parties interested that 1 will attend at my office.to Stendal, _ EVERY SATURDAY, To transact business connected with the office of trwdee of Lockhart township. All persons having business with said office will please take notice. v J. L. BASS, Trustee. NOTICE is hereby given to all parties Interested that I will attend in my office at my residence EVERY MONDAY. To transact business connected with the office of trustee of Marion township. All person* having business with said office will please take notice. T. C.NEI-SON, Trustee. Postofflce address: Winslow.
NOTICE »* hereby ctven to ail parties concerned tb»t l will attend i.i n y ratideuce EVERY WEDNESDAY. To tnnmrt inwlnm* conmetei with the lAm firantrot) M*di*on lomiship. Poelllvely no ba»mew tr»r«wifd except on | office dav*. J. IVBAt. KER.Trustee. ! Postofflce address: Petersburg. lod. NOTICE »* hereby efveu to all parties concerned that I wtti he at mv residence EVERY TUESDAY e. To attend to buslres* connected with the officeof trustee oif Monroe tow .*hlp. J. M. DAVIS. Trustee. Postoffice address: Spurgeon. V OTICE la hereby gteen to all person* cools eerned that i wilt attend a* tug office EVERY WoSt-AY I fn transact bnsinent connecled with the office of trustee of Jefferson town-hlo I- E. TRAYLOR. Trustee. Postoffice address: In, lud. UU ANTED—FAITHFUL M^.N or WOMES ” to travel for r***poi -'Me wtauli-hrd hoo*e lir-troJinnK Sal*-> *7Kl)a»d exnen-ea I PosSlWn iMHiiHDrat. Refereoce. Enclose ! *Slf-»ddre<*cd*tRt;iped enveiojie. TheXaliO ! ual. star Insurance Building. Chicago. Wanted-An Idea ttu,ju> ~ r D C.trr UttraO. Ci WBH> Mae Mm S3
